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The Weather Cloudy tonight and Sunday, probab! occasional snow; little change in emp THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE . ESTABLISHED 1873 “ " BISMARCK, NORTH ‘DAKOTA, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1984 Save 25 Aboard Sinking Ship (4 Diei rm H iro. | § CAT COAST GUARD GOES _4 Die in Fa ome Fire After Explosion wow SUBMERGED VESSEL Men Make Their Way Hand Over Hand Along Slender Line to Breakwater YOU CROTEDIN FERA Will Assist Steel Skeleton for New High School Bullding Rises :: CHILDREN'S ESCAPE | ‘Open Heart’ Drive Will Set Up Workshops to Re- FROM TRAGIC BLAZE Tragedy Near Denbigh Follows| Attempt to Pour Fuel in pair Toys, Renovate Clothes and Other Items PLAN TO HELP SANTA CLAUS ONE RESCUER LOSES LIFE Heavy Seas and Snow Make Lighted Lamp ONE BODY NOT RECOVERED Mrs. John Kolve, Mrs. John Hanson and Small Daughter Succumb to Burns Heroic Work of Guardsmen Agencies Unite in Effort to See Extremely Hazardous That Every Child Has Cheery Christmas Muskegon, Mich. Dec. 1.—(#} Twenty-five members of the whale- back freighter Henry Cort’s crew reached shore safely this morning, 11 hours after the ship struck the Muskegon harbor breakwater last oo Ma) |night in a 60-mile gale. Making their way to the break- water, hand over hand, on a line shot to the freighter by coast guards- men, the sailors fought their way over a mile of the wave-lashed breakwater to the shore. All were exhausted and suffering from exposure. Some had to be as- sisted to shore, apparently injured. So far as could be told, only 25 men were on the Cort when it struck. Considered an Amazing Feat The rescue of all of them was considered an amazing feat in view of the high sea that was running and the 60-mile gale. The Cort, pounding against the rocky protuberance, seemed from shore to be settling and little hope was felt that it could be saved. y The only fatality -ras the drown- r ing of John Dipert, 23-year-old coast guardsman who was lost when a 2 small boat was swamped Friday night ives auy while trying to reach the Cort, Dipert was answering his first call ESTION OF HOUR | is cree ce, -0 Victory Over Arm Aiding the fra othe recur the members of the Cort’s crew threw er Gea — @ line to the guardsmen who had One Killed in. Attempt to Run FAMILY FEUD SEEN Kiok in First Period Gives An-|Hopkins and lokes Propose Gi-|mecc,ineir “avo ‘ne Wot he eee re eh, Pe; napolis Squad First Win gantic Appropriation for _ | freeunes, buoys, the men reached the Waiting until the last men was Franklin Field, Philadelphia, Dec.|_ Washington, Dec. 1.—(P)—With ad- “ Towner, N. D., Dec. 1.—()—Four are dead and two others are ie g #< li au Estes E ruiti ell fis rietise # E | g 5 | ee iy i F | 5 i Business Revival P g ? i H i] on the breakwater, the men started host city Ny | visers pouring conflicting counsel in- |.—()—Navy outfought Army Satur- | - hed SLAYING OF ‘BABES day in the mud and whipped the Ca- ‘0 his ear, President Roosevelt entered in North Dakota. deis, 3 to 0, for the first time since Saturday the month in wi || The text of the proclamation fol- pee 1921 in the annual football battle be-, ™2ke ® decision regarded by official lows: tween the Vai Acupamibe, /h)| Neacimeton -aascns sot the: most m0 SEAL SALE MONDAY son 19-yard field goal from placement, in mentous ever to face a chief execu- state-wide clothing campaign isted for Years ie i Big ; tive. Parent Says Trouble Ex- |the first period. by Slade Cutter.) “ Whether to call on congress to ap- 000,000,000—in a gigantic effort to bane bene stiian en (eens. ae Fuel ane. “anemetey (@) sen ment problem, or wi r per Dec. 1A new |hour before game time turned to! oft federal expenditures in the belief that a business revival will do the Te isan issue. that sharply divide that vides was only a slight drizle blow-| ine’ citisenry nry, the economists, and the field and the heavier able to keep a fire going on even—authoritative sources say—the/ 14 that they were sustained by cof very cabinet itself. fee and apples. Two of She foremost advocates of The Cort struck on its port bow, the spending-for-rehabilitation idea,| 107 a 4. It ed likel: Secretary Harold L. Ickes, public ine? “Tith subsidence of the wind, [acer ponents lao Hert .X'|which still was of gale velocity, it ministrator, to thresh out} Would slip from the ledge and sink. their sugges wi chief ex-| Should it go to the bottom, it uggestions with the f ex- ‘5 ecutive before the log fireplace at|WOuld be the fourth time the Cort ‘Warm Springs in conferences start-|has visited the G:eat Lakes equiv- 46 on @ sensational gallop. ing this week-end. alent of “Davey Jones’ locker.” She braced, however, and Clark Hopkins Has Work Plan sank in 1927 off Bar Point, in Lake ’ plan for a federal work|Erie; again in 1927 off Colchester, relief corporation, with an appropria-|in Lake Ontario, and again last De~ tion of $8,000,000,000 to $9,000,000,000,|cember at a Detroit dock, having to abolish the “dole” in favor of gov-| limped into port after striking Bal- ernment-made jobs and opportuni-|lard’s reef in the Detroit river. ties, is said to have divided the presi-| Those three wrecks gave her the dential advisers. The more “conserv-|title of “junk ship” of the Great I. ative” were described as leaning to-| Lakes. Borries was stopped at the line of| Ward reduced federal expenditures,) She was built in 1892, of peculiar scrimmage. a Pegscset emphasis ae stimulating ponmisuetion, ier rounded sides ana wisted ivate business, possibly by govern-|a low deck, that was supposed to aa ete aie oft bis own Pid ment insurance of loans to speed up|make her proof against the vicissi- led. An. the heavy industries. tudes of Great Lakes shipping. For ‘Ickes, who, like Hopkins, expresses) years she constituted the “shock io ot pace tn eae pola oe" of the Pittsburgh Steamship justry ve =| Co. pert Uy quickly, leaves Kad Guardsmen Brave Storm Springs with a plan | Preparations for the rescue were pand Public works. ‘Though he was|staried early Saturday when the keeping © a close secret, | cane ay erel-|freighter was sighted hanging half gested that $5,000,000,000 to $7,000.-|o¢ Muskegon harbor. There were Hop- ii gency Relief Administration of Be Solicited in Business akote, and, Section and Schools clients in the ‘state will benefit, result of the items to be collected, solicitation in a. addition, hundreds i + Anti-Tuberculosis Funds Will °perstion with the Federal ot ef anriilt i : Through r| schools of the city stamps wl be sold, and contact cleaning, tin tens, nite ned, fe Oem. aoen: Cocpention wets mi Council Monday morning ereas: open the 1934 Christmas seal cam-,Citisens and organizations in this *|paign in behalf of the North Dakota ™manner will make federal funds go Anti-Tuberculosis association and Much further, : health work in the city. |, Therefore: I, Ole Olson, acting Mrs. E. E. Trepp, general drive Governor of North Dakota, i ali Eth g ERS Hie EE aE eeEEa ual phat f yilt ay ie Eee { LG ae wu "tes ; oat FHT i al el ghee Fah: ii rile For By SPREE Wu ia patbves or ciiesdfiat Hu APS rise t Bn Hl be Fe Hl i Quality of Exhibits Challenges Drouth, Depression and Bullding Fire : y i i i y well submerged on the rocky breakwater 000,000 might be s good guoss as to! ports that the crew might have perishe ‘woes be in mind for an imme-| 64 as the coast guard cutter Escanaba ne radioed there were no signs of life E ; i >a Ft Eo ree z E j Fe. i f & i program. Army's one-yard line. A api spot roma ine aboard the Cort. Later the lookout Buckler got his punt euay, nioaly. plan for a total yee eee (Continued om Page Three) $13,000,000,000 to $16,000,000,000, but ras two different approaches to| Powers See New Hope rat the, intertwined problems of Teoatz| For Naval Agreement * in most minds that many business At Kid’ Dog Show] ana banking leaders and other advo-| London, Dec. 1.—(#}—The possibil= — cates of a tapering-off process would} ity of a new tri-power ten-year naval mn dogs were entered in the! be found in the opposing camp. treaty was seen Saturday as a result i FERA Collects Figures lof new proposals made by Japan. The federal emergency relief ad-|. Ambassador Tsuneo Matsudaira of ministration has collected statistics|Japan told Norman H. Davis, the to show that the number of people| American representative to the naval on relief of all kinds has grown from| parley, that Japan was willing to try co ee 13,388,000 (te Pci gaccvalg 1933, to 18,-| to reach an understanding Ga the bass . 050,000 last September. More thanjof recent British compromise propos- inistry of Defense Calls on half were on direct relief—which of-| als. ne 3 However, the British suggestion t! Governent at La Pax to Japan’s right to equality in theory on- Coase Fighting ly be granted and that equality in fact be withheld was flatly rejected by Asuncion, Paraguay, Dec. 1.—(P)— Satur- | if fi \ i EF | ie En “I Ry i E t : : fy A | i] ; Hi a; i it i H BEE EE i i sf i i § aaf i -t i | | i : i se gave ' ! fi "se ee 4 . i FE 5g eee 4 ? i ne nae f ad ali if i Acting Captain Warms, Chi Engineer Abbot Charged i 2 ¢ i : i; H ge E gg if iH fit i ae i Ba £5 ne i Hi j | eaigl Mi iE i : lise i f ie i ft 2 | i a [ He i i H. i : i i ‘ i a | Football Scores | First Period N. C. State 0; Duke 6. Georgetown 0; Western Maryland 7. Georgia Tech 0; Georgia 0. Washington State 0; U. of Detroit die pfte Bats Te fs Holy Cross 0; Boston College 0. Washington State 0; U. of Detroit 6.